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Helping Children Cope With Violence |
CreditsSourceNational Association for the Education of Young ChildrenContentsAdditional ResourcesForumsRaising our KidsRelated ArticlesViolence and Young Children's DevelopmentPull the Plug on TV and Video Game Violence Week |
Media-reported violence often intrudes on the daily lives of young children both in their homes and in out-of-home settings. As technology becomes a greater presence in everyones lives, children cannot help but be exposed to more accounts of real-world violence, and parents and caregivers cannot realistically expect to fully protect children from reports of violence. The degree to which children are exposed to violence varies greatly, as does the degree to which they are affected. Many children directly experience violence in their own lives. The ideas children build about the role of violence in human interactions come from all of their exposures to it. Deciding what the adults role should be in helping children work through the violence they are exposed to presents a big challenge. Most of us would prefer to avoid dealing with disturbing issues in order to protect childrens innocence for as long as possible. But not talking to children about the violence they hear about--or actually see first-hand--denies them the opportunity to sort out what they hear and figure out what it means. In Remote Control Childhood? Combating the Hazards of Media Culture, author Diane E. Levin provides useful strategies for families, caregivers, and educators for dealing with violence in the media, the media environment, and supporting childrens healthy development. Following are some guidelines from the book to help children grapple with real-world violence:
Copies of Remote Control Childhood? Combating the Hazards of Media Culture can be obtained from NAEYC, 1509 16th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20036-1426, Resource Sales (800-424-2460, ext. 604 or 202-232-8777, ext. 604), Order #326/$8.00 |
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Additional ResourcesNAEYC Position Statement on Violence in the Lives of Children. 1993. Washington, DC. Order #588 Back to the Table of ContentsCreditsNational Association for the Education of Young Children Copyright © 1997 by National Association for the Education of Young Children. Back to the Top |